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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Foster & Anor v Director of Public Prosecutions [2004] EWHC 2955 (Admin) (01 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2955.html Cite as: [2005] 1 WLR 1400, [2004] EWHC 2955 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division)
MR JUSTICE PITCHFORD
____________________
RICHARD FOSTER | (FIRST APPELLANT) | |
MICHAEL RUTHERFORD | (SECOND APPELLANT) | |
-v- | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | (DEFENDANT) |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS L MARSHALL (instructed by Howells) appeared on behalf of the FIRST APPELLANT
MR P WEATHERBY (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) appeared on behalf of the SECOND APPELLANT
MR M NEALE (instructed by the Director of Public Prosecutions) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"On 2nd March 2003 ... without lawful authority or reasonable excuse detained S, a child under the age of 16, so as to remove her from the lawful control of LT, a person having lawful control of the child..."
"Can the operative act of removal from lawful authority for the purposes of S2(1)(a) Child Abduction Act 1984 occur four hours after the qualifying child has arrived at the appellant's home at the suggestion of one of the appellants simply because the appellants later became aware of the fact that the qualifying child is under sixteen years?"
"(1) Subject to subsection (3) below, a person, other than one mentioned in subsection (2) below commits an offence if, without lawful authority or reasonable excuse, he takes or detains a child under the age of sixteen --
"(a) so as to remove him from the lawful control of any person having lawful control of the child; or
"(b) so as to keep him out of the lawful control of any person entitled to lawful control of the child.
"2. ...
"3. In proceedings against any person for an offence under this section, it shall be a defence for that person to prove --
"(a) ...
"(b) that, at the time of the alleged offence, he believed the child had attained the age of sixteen."
"For the purposes of this part of this Act --
"(a)...
"(b)...
"(c) a person shall be regarded as detaining a child if he causes the child to be detained or induces the child to remain with him or any other person ..."
"We have said that it is necessary to refer to the legislative history of s2. [Counsel] has drawn the Court's attention to the fact that the provisions of s2 of the 1984 Act, which create this offence, were passed in consequence of the Report of the Law Revision Committee on Offences Against the Person (Cmmd 7844,1980). The section represents, we think, Parliament's response to the relevant parts of that Report. It is right that this Court may have regard to that part of the Report to see what any mischief in the law was then thought to be, and at which it may be right to suppose that the legislation was directed.
"In para 242 of that Report we see that the Law Revision Committee had been concerned by the ruling in the case of R v Jones [1973] Crim LR 621, which had been decided upon the phrase, 'taking out of the possession and against the will of the parent', in s20 of the Sexual Offences Act 1956. This paragraph describes the facts in that case, which was an attempt by a man to induce two small girls to go with him for the purpose of his indecently assaulting them, by offering them an inducement in the form of sweets. The paragraph continues: 'He was charged with attempting to commit an offence under section 20 of the 1956 Act. The judge directed the jury to acquit the defendant. He ruled that the words 'taking out of the possession and against the will of the parent' are to be taken as meaning some conduct by the defendant amounting to a substantial interference with the possessory relationship of parent and child. The word 'possession' in section 20 shows that it is this possessory relationship that the section sets out to preserve and in this case the defendant's conduct could not amount to an attempt to breach such a relationship. Although the case was distinguished in R v Mears [1975] Crim LR 155, a case on section 56 of the Act of 1861, we are anxious that the decision in Jones should be reversed because conduct like that in the case of Jones should as a matter of policy amount to an offence. The problem is how to define the offence. The degree of interference we wish to cover is interference with the responsibilities of the persons having the lawful control of the child, whether permanently or for the time being, for the well-being of the child. Interference should not have to be substantial as it has been held in Jones. The actual form of words would be a matter for the draughtsman.'
"[Counsel] submitted of course that the extent to which Parliament has dealt with the perceived defects in the law has to be determined by reference to the words used in the statute, and not by the hopes and intentions of the members of the Law Revision Committee; and we so approach our task."
"[Counsel] accepted, as in our view is clear, that the phrase 'so as to' is concerned with the objective consequence of the taking or detaining, and not with the subjective purpose of the accused in doing what he did. He has contended however that the question whether the taking or detaining had that consequence is a question of fact which the jury must be directed to consider by reference to the true meaning in law in this context of the word 'control'."
"It is right of course that the question whether any taking or detaining of a child has had the consequence of removing or keeping him out of the lawful control of the person having lawful control of him is a question of fact, and the jury in considering it must have regard to the meaning of 'lawful control'. We do not think that any attempt to define the word is necessary or desirable. It is an ordinary word in the English language, and Parliament did not find it necessary to enact any definition of limitation or extension in this statute. It seems to us that the concept of 'control' may to some extent vary according to the person having the control at the relevant time, whether it be a parent or a schoolmaster or a nanny."
"'We appreciate also that an act such as taking a child for a walk without first obtaining the consent of the parent may theoretically come within the offence, but in all bona fide cases one or other of the defences will plainly be available.'"
"We do not accept that the concept of 'control', as used in this Act, has a necessary spatial element. Who has control of a child is a question of fact. If, for example, 'physical control', by which is meant a taking hold of the child and continuing to hold the child, is taken by a stranger at a time when the child has been, up to that time, in the control of its parents, then that would inevitably amount to a removal of the child from the control of its parents. Of course, it may be that in such circumstances there would also be a detaining of a child so as to move him from the lawful control of his parent or other person.
"Here we are concerned with taking rather than detaining, taking by section 3 requires some movement sufficient to amount to an accompanying. In considering the meaning of the words 'so as to remove him from the lawful control of the person having lawful control of the child', the example is relevant and in our judgment indicates that no geographical removal is contemplated in the words 'so as to remove him from the lawful control of any person having lawful control.' Indeed, in the example which is given, in paragraph 243, which has been indicated already, there does not seem to be any geographical content contemplated such as that for which [counsel] argues. We are satisfied that the words with which we are concerned do not require the removal of the child but the removal of the control of the child from the parent or other person having lawful control to the accused. There is no need for any complicated definition of the word 'control'. It is a perfectly ordinary English word in every day use."
"In respect of the counts which were of attempted abduction it was submitted that there was no evidence to show that the appellant's intention had been to remove the particular children from the ambit of lawful control."
"How do you decide whether there has been a removal by this man of the child from the control of that child's parents? There are various ways that one can formulate that. Mr Burn has made various suggestions. Has the defendant substituted his authority or will for that of the parent's? Is it a case of substitution? Or has he stepped in between the parent and the child and taken control of the child? Or, as I am going to put to you, I think you might find it effectively sums up the position, was he, the defendant, and not the parent effectively in control of the child at that time? You might think it, is really a matter for you, that that perhaps is the signpost which will help you. Was he and not the parent effectively in control of the particular child at the time when they were together?"
"First, was the particular child in the control of his parent at the particular time? ...Secondly, if he was in control or she was in the control of the parent at the particular time, did the defendant take the child? We have talked about taking. If so, if he did take the child, did this have the effect of removing the child from the control of his parent?"
"We see no defect in this summing-up."
"Just which offence is this applicant said to have committed? It clearly cannot be the offence, under paragraph (a), of taking these children so as to remove them from either the mother's or the grandmother's lawful control, since neither had such control. Nor can it be, under paragraph (b), the offence of taking the children so as to keep them out of the mother's entitlement to lawful control: by the time of the flight out of the United States the mother had no such entitlement, and even before that the applicant knew nothing of the Wyoming orders. If it is said, under paragraph (b), that the offence was committed against the grandmother, the prosecution have to argue that the applicant's ignorance of the grandmother's legal entitlement is simply immaterial.
"I would not be disposed to place such a wide construction on the subsection. Given, as I understood now to be conceded, that mens rea is required, this surely can only be an intention, when taking the children, to keep them out of the control of someone known to be entitled to such control. It is not sufficient that the applicant knew the grandmother was intent on applying for control and thus might already have been granted it. I would construe the words 'so as to' to mean 'with the intention of', rather than merely 'with the effect of'. That is not to say that it will always be necessary to establish that the offender knows just who does have, or is entitled to, lawful control."